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Showing Original Post only (View all)Can You Call a 9-Year-Old a Psychopath? [View all]
One day last summer, Anne and her husband, Miguel, took their 9-year-old son, Michael, to a Florida elementary school for the first day of what the family chose to call summer camp. For years, Anne and Miguel have struggled to understand their eldest son, an elegant boy with high-planed cheeks, wide eyes and curly light brown hair, whose periodic rages alternate with moments of chilly detachment. Michaels eight-week program was, in reality, a highly structured psychological study less summer camp than camp of last resort.
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By the time he turned 5, Michael had developed an uncanny ability to switch from full-blown anger to moments of pure rationality or calculated charm a facility that Anne describes as deeply unsettling. You never know when youre going to see a proper emotion, she said. She recalled one argument, over a homework assignment, when Michael shrieked and wept as she tried to reason with him. I said: Michael, remember the brainstorming we did yesterday? All you have to do is take your thoughts from that and turn them into sentences, and youre done! Hes still screaming bloody murder, so I say, Michael, I thought we brainstormed so we could avoid all this drama today. He stopped dead, in the middle of the screaming, turned to me and said in this flat, adult voice, Well, you didnt think that through very clearly then, did you?
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In many children, though, the signs are subtler. Callous-unemotional children tend to be highly manipulative, Frick notes. They also lie frequently not just to avoid punishment, as all children will, but for any reason, or none. Most kids, if you catch them stealing a cookie from the jar before dinner, theyll look guilty, Frick says. They want the cookie, but they also feel bad. Even kids with severe A.D.H.D.: they may have poor impulse control, but they still feel bad when they realize that their mom is mad at them. Callous-unemotional children are unrepentant. They dont care if someone is mad at them, Frick says. They dont care if they hurt someones feelings. Like adult psychopaths, they can seem to lack humanity. If they can get what they want without being cruel, thats often easier, Frick observes. But at the end of the day, theyll do whatever works best.
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The benefits of successful treatment could be enormous. Psychopaths are estimated to make up 1 percent of the population but constitute roughly 15 to 25 percent of the offenders in prison and are responsible for a disproportionate number of brutal crimes and murders. A recent estimate by the neuroscientist Kent Kiehl placed the national cost of psychopathy at $460 billion a year roughly 10 times the cost of depression in part because psychopaths tend to be arrested repeatedly. (The societal costs of nonviolent psychopaths may be even higher. Robert Hare, the co-author of Snakes in Suits, describes evidence of psychopathy among some financiers and business people; he suspects Bernie Madoff of falling into that category.) The potential for improvement is also what separates diagnosis from determinism: a reason to treat psychopathic children rather than jail them. As the nuns used to say, Get them young enough, and they can change, Dadds observes. You have to hope thats true. Otherwise, what are we stuck with? These monsters.
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much more:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/13/magazine/can-you-call-a-9-year-old-a-psychopath.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all
This kid is scarier than hell at 9 years old.
This entire article is worth reading. it is chilling, and it tries to offer some hope. The idea that someone so young could be a psychopath isn't a universal belief. However, ignoring the problems some kids really have ultimately comes at an enormous cost however how they are labelled.

